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![]() Richard Hertz wrote: Most teachers I know are out the door long before then. burn out Also, most other salaried professionals work longer hours than teachers for no extra pay either, so the gripes about extra take-home work falls on uncaring ears. True, but most of my salaried friends make 2X or 3X what I make. The bottom line is - there are plenty of qualified people lined up to take the teaching jobs at the current salary levels. Even when unemployment is at historic lows this is the case. REALLY?!?!? Send them to Northern VA where we had lots of unfilled positions last year with subs filling in. For quite a while 1/3 of our special ed teachers were on emergengy certificates. We can't find enough teachers to fill the rooms. I oppose all those government gravy pensions. (Military/combat service excluded) One other big problem is the non-meritocracy of government/school systems. Pay is based on years of service and so-called education credits. In the "real" world pay is based on performance, merit, etc. Most of the problems lie with the administrations and the general concept of "free" or public/government run education. "Margy Natalie" wrote in message ... Yeah, teachers only work 195 days a year (but they are only paid for 195 days a year). Work 7 hours???!!?!?! For the past 3 years my New Year's Resolution was to leave school before 6PM (I get there at 7:30), I usually stuck with it until almost late January :-). The retirement is usually decent if you stick with it for 30 or 35 years as opposed to the federal government or military where you get a good pension at 20. Margy Richard Hertz wrote: Yeah, but they only have to work 180 days out of the year and work only 7 hour days and then get retirement plans that are killing the tax payers. "Stu Gotts" wrote in message ... On Thu, 01 Jan 2004 13:59:54 GMT, "Matthew S. Whiting" wrote: wrote: Jay Honeck wrote: Capt. Haynes is a retired airline captain, and a sought-after speaker on the mashed-potato circuit. As such he should set for life, and pretty much rolling in money. There are some retired TWA pilots that need to work to make ends meet. There are some recently retired pilots from "reorganized" carriers who have lost a good portion of their retirement. That is truly infortunate, but I have a hard time feeling too sorry for folks that made well over $100K/year and didn't sock away a little on their own for retirement. I make less than most senior airline pilots and I'm not planning on having SS be available when I retire nor my company pension. If one or both are still there, that will be gravey. Then, there's those overpaid school teachers in California who retire at 100%, get COLA increases from a bankrupt state, and who are rolling in dough.~ I'm not familiar with CA (thankfully!), but in most states teachers make a LOT less than airline pilots. And put up with mounds more bull**** for about 10 hours a day and at least 20 days out of the month. |
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